The San Francisco Examiner is brimming with Pride. Below, find our expansive Pride 2018 coverage, from a trail-blazing drag queen wrestler and a rollicking events calendar to efforts to house homeless LGBT youth.

More than 1,400 children and youth under the age of 25 were counted as homeless in San Francisco last year — with about half identifying as queer — yet two-year-old plans for a Navigation Center solely serving this vulnerable group have yet to come to fruition.

San Francisco’s newest supervisor, who represents neighborhoods including the Castro District, Glen Park and Noe Valley, is looking to change that, and made finding housing for The City’s homeless, particularly its marginalized youth, a key promise in his campaign.

Del Mar is among a handful of drag wrestlers in the United States trailblazing a path for the LGBT community in a hyper-masculine setting. Now Del Mar is writing new storylines for Wrestling for Charity’s bombastic wrestlers, and vows to bring even more inclusivity to the small but growing band of brawlers.

The San Francisco Bay Times was founded forty years ago by gay men and women — together. That was an intentional focus for the small, local LGBT newspaper, said current co-publisher Betty Sullivan. “I realize there are times when gay men want to be with gay men, and lesbians want to be with lesbians,” she said. But, “I think we need to unify.”

A pianist and singer-songwriter who has been a writer and producer on three seasons of Transparent — as well as on Pose, Ryan Murphy’s new show about trans women of color in 1980s New York — Our Lady J will be in San Francisco this weekend in several capacities. She’ll be at the Trans March this Friday afternoon, topic and length of speech yet to be determined. And then after the Pride Parade wraps up on Sunday, Our Lady J is scheduled to perform three songs, one of them an original and another a Dolly Parton cover.

The LGBT policy advisor for San Francisco’s Human Rights Commission, Sa’id is an out trans woman who’s been active in the forthcoming Compton’s TLGB District, legislative fights on behalf of intersex children in California, and in the general push for gender-neutral public restrooms.

Kin Folkz, a community grand marshal in this year’s Pride event and a founder or co-founder of numerous organizations, including Spectrum Queer Media, Omni: The Bi/Pan/Trans Women and Transmen of Color Network and REVOLVE Creative Arts + Film Fest, has decades of experience to her name.

From reports of multiple gay-bashings in Northern California to rapacious corporations like Wells Fargo rainbow-washing their foreclosures, Pride can be a little draining. It’s been a few years since the Supreme Court delivered good news to the LGBTQ community, so if some barfy evangelical ejected you from their bakery and you need something fun to do instead, read on.